Last September, the CIA quietly changed its long-standing policy for how it would process certain records requests by implementing a new fee structure that will essentially discourage the public from trying to get the agency to declassify secret government documents because the costs are too high, open-government advocates have charged.

Truthout filed several MDR’s last year to try and gain access to materials in custody of the CIA that were written by a high-value detainee and other classified documents pertaining to the Bush administration’s interrogation policies. All except one of our requests were made prior to the implementation of the new regulations.

“Overnight, without public comment or notice, the [CIA] decreed that declassification reviews would now cost requesters up to $72 per hour, even if no information is found or released,” wrote Nate Jones of George Washington University’s National Security Archive, a historical research group that files numerous Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests and publishes declassified documents.

The CIA said it made the changes after conducting a review of public MDR regulations “that govern certain aspects of its processing of MDR requests,” according to language contained in the Federal Register.

“As a result of this review, the Agency has revised its MDR regulations to more clearly reflect the current CIA organizational structure and policies and practices…,” the agency said. “This rule is being issues as a final rule without prior notice of porposed rulemaking as allowed by the Administrative Procedure Act for rules of agency procedure and interpretation.”

The CIA then goes on to break down the exorbitant new costs associated with searches analysts conduct for responsive records pertaining to MDR requests.

But a lawsuit filed last week against the agency in US District Court in Washington, DC, aims to void the changes the CIA made to its MDR regulations and declare it a willful violation of the law.

The complaint was filed by attorneys Bradley Moss and Kel McClanahan on behalf of Jeff Stein, the veteran reporter who has written extensively about intelligence and national security-related issues; Katelyn Sack, a University of Virginia graduate student conducting research on lie detectors; and Mark Zaid, a lawyer who represents national security whistleblowers. Zaid is also the founder of the James Madison Project, an organization that works to reduce government secrecy. McClanahan is the executive director of Arlington, Virginia-based public interest law firm National Security Counselors, which is also listed as a plaintiff in the lawsuit. (Full disclosure: McClanahan is representing this reporter in a FOIA lawsuit filed earlier this month against the CIA, FBI, and other government agencies.)

What’s unusual about the lawsuit is that it seeks class-action status on behalf of all of the individuals who filed MDR’s and were impacted by the CIA’s new fee structure. McClanahan said he has requested the CIA provide him with copies of all the MDR responses the agency issued last year so he could determine the exact number of people affected by the CIA’s “declassification tax.” The lawsuit demands the CIA “contact every MDR requester whose request was wrongfully rejected and offer the opportunity to reinstate their respective requests and then process accordingly.”

The complaint, in addition to leveling claims that the CIA violated federal law associated with the new MDR fees, also alleges the agency has violated provisions of FOIA – and three decades of case law – by “unilaterally declaring that requesters are not allowed to limit the amount of money they will spend on FOIA requests,” McClanahan said.

The CIA has done this by first demanding that FOIA requesters agree to pay all fees for records or the agency will refuse to process the request. Moreover, the lawsuit alleges the CIA “violated FOIA by counting time spent by computers performing automated searches for fee purposes.”

“The entire point of this lawsuit is to expose and invalidate some of the CIA’s most problematic information access policies,” McClanahan said in an email. “Not only did the CIA unlawfully bypass the entire notice and comment process when publishing this rule, citing an exception to normal rulemaking procedures that only applies in very narrow circumstances (none of which are even close to relevant here), but even had the CIA followed the rules when promulgating this regulation, it would have been against the express will of all three branches of government.”

“Nearly forty years ago the Supreme Court stated that while it is legal to charge individuals reasonable fees for government services, according to a law passed by Congress and signed by the President, it was not legal to charge individuals for services which benefited the public generally,” McClanahan added. “In this era of purported transparency, it is outrageous to argue that declassifying information that no longer needs to remain secret is not in the public interest. Not only is this fee hike unwise, it’s illegal.”

The CIA would not comment on the litigation.

Since Jones revealed the new MDR fee structure earlier this month, more than three dozen good-government groups, including Jones’ National Security Archive, sent a letter to the CIA last week calling upon the agency to reverse the new fee policy.

“Unlike FOIA requests, if an agency fails to declassify and release the information under the MDR process, requesters can appeal the agency’s decision to the Interagency Security Classification Appeals Panel (ISCAP) for independent review,” the letter states. “According to the Information Security Oversight Office, ISCAP officials have overruled agency classification decisions more than 65 percent of the time since 1996.”

Additionally, the transparency advocacy organization, OpentheGovernent.org, has been asking individuals to sign an online petition demanding the CIA “withdraw this retrograde regulation.”

Kenneth F. Bunting, executive director of the National Freedom of Information Coalition, which provided McClanahan’s law firm with a grant to file the lawsuit, said the CIA is “an out-of-control agency that wants to operate with accountability to no one.”

“We understand and even appreciate that secrecy is inherent in their culture,” Bunting said. “But allowing them to operate with total disregard for rules and laws that affect the rest of government serves no good national interest.”

McClanahan, whose law firm is also a signatory to the letter, said the pressure good-government groups are placing on the CIA via the petition and letter-writing campaign “complements our litigation perfectly. ”

“I will toast our success if this campaign results in the voluntary reversal of this policy, but I still hold out hope that this case will result in no agency being able to do this ever again,” he said. “The fact that a letter-writing campaign was even necessary in the first place is the reason we filed this suit.”

The Freedom of Information Act is great in theory and principle. It’s when it’s applied that everything from nettlesome snags to stone walls arise. It needs to be revisited by Congress to streamline basic processes and also protect conscientious government workers from retaliation or fear of it. Transparency is something that is demonstrated more than debated.

It is reasonable to assume that the CIA leadership knew quite well that there would be lawsuits over this policy which may get to the Supreme Court. They must feel confident that the policy will be upheld. Or, if not, then the motive might be to provide a smokescreen to buy time while they work on the real issue. Either that, or they planning a coup. Either way trust that they work to accomplish the common good is shaky. Ron Paul wants to dismantle the agency altogether. An excellent idea. They’ve long ago outworn their usefulness, and show signs of age, surliness and corruption. They are not the only agency to show flagrant disrespect for President Obama’s wishes: The DEA has also made a spectacle of busting medical marijuana farmers in blatant disregard of the president’s publicly stated wishes.